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The Graduate
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Directed by Mike Nichols.
"Just one word: plastic." "Are you here for an affair?" These lines and others became cultural touchstones, as 1960s youth rebellion seeped into the California upper middle-class in Mike Nichols' landmark hit. Mentally adrift the summer after graduating from college, suburbanite Benjamin Braddock (Dustin Hoffman) would rather float in his parents' pool than follow adult advice about his future. But the exhortation of family friend Mr. Robinson (Murray Hamilton) to seize every possible opportunity inspires Ben to accept an offer of sex from icily feline Mrs. Robinson (Anne Bancroft). The affair and the pool are all well and good until Ben is pushed to go out with the Robinsons' daughter Elaine (Katharine Ross) and he falls in love with her. Mrs. Robinson sabotages the relationship and an understandably disgusted Elaine runs back to college. Determined not to let Elaine get away, Ben follows her to school and then disrupts her family-sanctioned wedding. None too happy about her pre-determined destiny, Elaine flees with Ben -- but to what? Directing his second feature film after Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Nichols matched the story's satire of suffocating middle-class shallowness with an anti-Hollywood style influenced by the then-voguish French New Wave. Using odd angles, jittery editing, and evocative widescreen photography, Nichols welded a hip New Wave style and a generation-gap theme to a fairly traditional screwball comedy script by Buck Henry and Calder Willingham from Charles Webb's novel. Adding to the European art film sensibility, the movie offers an unsettling and ambiguous ending with no firm closure. And rather than Robert Redford, Nichols opted for a less glamorous unknown for the pivotal role of Ben, turning Hoffman into a star and opening the door for unconventional leading men throughout the 1970s. With a pop-song score written by Paul Simon and performed by Simon & Garfunkel bolstering its contemporary appeal, The Graduate opened to rave reviews in December 1967 and surpassed all commercial expectations. It became the top-grossing film of 1968 and was nominated for seven Oscars, including Best Picture, Actor, and Actress, with Nichols winning Best Director. Together with Bonnie and Clyde, it stands as one of the most influential films of the late '60s, as its mordant dissection of the generation gap helped lead the way to the youth-oriented Hollywood artistic "renaissance" of the early '70s. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
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JakeStevensJakeStevens NOT OVERRATED!
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"It's really sad to me when a person dismisses a film as "overrated" and doesn't take into consideration the age and era of a film. I honestly don't see how ANYONE couldn't at least appreciate, let alone love, this film in how it was so key in changing the style of cinema for the 1970's. It's also obviously a matter of youthful discontent, as evidenced by Roger Ebert's two polemic reviews of this film. When he first saw it in 1967, he loved it - he could relate to the flawed young man's discontentment of upper-middle class hypocrisy and could feel the alienation of his generation from their parents. 30 years later, Ebert is old, set in his ways - he IS the upper-middle class that he so rallied against, and his review of The Graduate is disparaging and devoid of any understanding of the film's emotional core. Well I, for one, found the film to be dated, true, but its message is still the same and can be felt by just as many people of this ... " [More]
koneckonec The Graduate
by konec in konec Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"Saw this today for the third time. The first time I was 14 and didn't like it at all -found it neither funny nor involving, I straight up didn't get it. The second time I was 18 and loved it. As I write this I am 20 and will be 21 in a week, which is as it turns out exactly how old Benjamin Braddock is at the start of the movie. I haven't graduated yet, but then I got held back in kindergarten for reasons which remain hazy to me. I still love it. Paul Simon's lyrics having nothing to do with anything (well, besides a few lines out of "Sound of Silence"), and that's kind of irritating, and I guess some of the symbolism is pretty heavy handed (though I find it effective nonetheless), but it really does capture beautifully the experience of being boring and indecisive and inarticulate, as Ben is and as I at times am/fear myself to be. And it's very, very funny. " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Re: Top 5 Everybody Seems To Lo ...
by Risselada in Top 5
is neutral about it.
"1. Shrek - Yeah this and all those other family oriented, 3-D CGI Dreamworks/Pixar kind of deals. I actually haven't seen most of these types of movies in their entirety. Gave up after the first generation of them, but they only seem to be the same crap. Maybe I'm hardhearted, but this stuff just isn't funny to me. The movies are the most annoying of all the huge corporate francises. I have to see these characters in every kind of sick ad for products I would have never even wanted to hear about in the first place. The messages they deliver are trite platitudes. And most of them are just big music videos for annoying bands like Smashmouth doing remakes of The Monkees. Uuuugh. And it's all this politically correct new-age shit. Let's not speak of that anymore.2. Crash / Million Dollar Baby - two recent Oscar winners both written by that hack Paul Haggis. These movies are manipulative in the worst way. I call these movies where I can feel the writer ... " [More]
cspraguecsprague Movies that came to mind...
by csprague in Best Movie Soundtracks
liked it.
"So, when i joined this group there were a couple of films that came to mind right away that i added to the lists. The first one was probably the one I am most sick of hearing about, but you have to put it on the list anyway, right? The Graduate, soundtrack uses all Simon and Garfunkel songs, and who doesn't love them? Parsely, Sage, Rosemary, Thyme. That's all I have to say about that. Next I thought of The Virgin Suicides; Sofia Coppola's semi-creep-yet-beautiful take on a family of sheltered girls. The film actually kind of freaked me out the first time I saw it, but I loved the music. I didn't know it at the time, but the entire soundtrack was created by Air. Good stuff. The next two aren't history makers or anything, I just have a serious thing for U2 and I would be remise if I left them out. The Million Dollar Hotel was not that great of a movie, I liked it for some of its thematic content, but really, did Bono, Larry, Adam, and the Edge have to chill in the lobby during the m ... " [More]
lbenschwartzlbenschwartz Re: Top 5 EVER
by lbenschwartz in Top 5
loved it.
"Not saying they're the best ever made, but their my favs... 1. The Graduate2. Blue Velvet3. The Warriors4. Clockwork Orange5. Saturday Night Fever " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Your overrated list
by Risselada in Totally Over-rated
is neutral about it.
"Swingers's detail pageI thought I wouldn't like participating in this group at first because it get's frustrating complaining about movies, but I can't seem to hold myself back. Puhnner, you asked me to list some of my overrated movies, referring to my definition of overrated by ratio. Well I'm not sure if this is going by the same criteria, but I've come up with a list from another source. I also rate movies at the website movielens. It will give you recommendations based on your ratings and whatnot. It also gives some interesting statistics. For one, it tells me which movies I have rated the lowest compared to the average rating on their site. So I have looked at that list and picked several of them. The thing about this method is that I am not using what my impression of the ammount of acclaim a movie has received for the ratio but rather what the ammount of acclaim a website thinks a movie has based on the votes from it's users. Some of t ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
The image of young Benjamin Braddock appearing at his parents' swank pool party fully clad in scuba gear remains one of the most satisfying images of youthful alienation ever captured on celluloid. Confused, cut off, and trapped in the claustrophobia of trying to figure out what he's going to do with himself, Benjamin is a model of dissatisfied aimlessness caught up in the whirl of parental and societal expectation. Not surprisingly, his character struck a chord with 1967 audiences, and The Graduate became the highest-grossing film of 1968 and a landmark in the cinema of hip, New Wave, antiestablishment disillusionment. While an enduring classic for its perpetual topicality, and a harbinger of similar dissections of youthful disenchantment that permeated the late '60s and 1970s, The Graduate was also remarkable for providing an unrevolutionary revolution. Benjamin is ultimately a bored, confused young man who has an affair with an older woman (played by an actress only six years Dustin Hoffman's senior), discovers he loves her daughter, and impetuously absconds with the girl to a future offering yet more disillusionment. To top it off, Benjamin's not even that great a guy, more of a conflicted muddle than a viable counter-culture hero. He doesn't want to end up like his parents, but he happily drives around in the Alfa Romeo they give him as a graduation present. He even ends up running off with the very girl they picked for him in the first place. But while it's easy for contemporary viewers to regard the film's message as compromised, The Graduate was something new and provocative for late '60s audiences, a slyly wrapped package of antiestablishment sentiment. Benjamin Braddock's very imperfections made him a believable vehicle for youthful malaise in the first place; to a generation disillusioned with the prosperity in which they had been raised by indulgent parents, Benjamin's brand of resentful ennui resonated on a visceral level. In painting a portrait of an imperfect youth rejecting an equally imperfect world, Mike Nichols and Buck Henry offered only satirical possibilities instead of self-affirming answers. Instead of driving off into the sunset in his Alfa, Benjamin and his beloved board a dirty city bus, hesitant to look either at each other or at the future they have chosen. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
 



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